T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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350.1 | Interesting to explore the thought | INK::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Tue Apr 21 1987 11:33 | 12 |
| Hmm .. this topic almost sounds like a candidate for the RELIGION
file.
On reviving a body without a soul -- that's what some forms of zombie
are supposed to be. The implications are intriguing. Also, that
might make a body available for Something Else to inhabit. The
implications of _that_ are even more interesting.
I would assume that if someone was willingly preserved cryogenically,
the soul would be aware of it and could elect to Stay Behind.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
350.2 | Hibernation has its benefits | EDEN::KLAES | Patience, and shuffle the cards. | Tue Apr 21 1987 13:11 | 6 |
| If someone is put into suspended animation while still alive,
then the "soul" should not go anywhere - it will be as if they were
asleep.
Larry
|
350.3 | Don't thaw me! | ORION::HERBERT | Walk me out in the morning dew... | Tue Apr 21 1987 14:05 | 17 |
| I don't see the appeal in being frozen...I guess it depends on
your beliefs. Imagine being frozen, and being in suspended
animation, while all of your friends and family die off, while
the whole world changes, and then you are revived by an army
of mutant ants that have become intelligent and want to use
you as a slave. (Okay, so I've seen too many bad sci-fi movies...)
Seriously, though...there would be no telling what kind of world
you would be brought back into. All of your knowledge could be
useless as far as dealing with the every day world of our future.
At best, you might be considered a Historian. Big deal. ;^) And
although you might be revived because a cure had been found for
your illness, what if your immune system was totally inadequate
to deal with all of the other subtle environmental changes that
had taken place over many years of natural evolution?
Jerri
|
350.4 | An on and off switch ? | WILVAX::LATOUCHE | | Tue Apr 21 1987 15:13 | 13 |
|
Hmmm... How can you be in suspended animation if you are clinically
and brain. I can understand that all tissue is intact but there
is no brain wave activity. From what I'm told, no brain wave activity
equals no life.
I can see that someone could will themself in preparation but what
about the dying cancer patient who has a will to live yet the body
gives up on them?
Jim LaTouche :-)
|
350.5 | "back to the future?" | USAT02::CARLSON | Fear is the mind killer | Tue Apr 21 1987 15:50 | 13 |
| re.4 But how do we know there's no brain activity?
I agree that it would be strange to wake up many years later,
with no knowledge of current happenings. I think when this can
be used effectively for humans, they'd have to make that decision.
(Anyone read 'THE DEAD ZONE' by Stephen King- similiar circumstances)
Maybe they could use persons with little hope, like prisoners on
death row... Course they might be sorry when they're revived. ;-)
Perhaps something similar could be used for space travel...
Theresa.
|
350.6 | Legal vs. Real death. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Tue Apr 21 1987 16:34 | 32 |
| RE: .4
Currently the *legal* definition of death in many states includes
or is based on the concept of the cessation of brain activity.
The first corpse-sicles (sorry, blame Larry Niven) would certainly
have legal obstacles to overcome on this point.
Clearly, if this became a reality the "practical" definition of
brain death would become outdated -- it would simply be inapplicable
to this case.
At the present -- freezing a living person, even one minutes from
clinical (i.e., brain) death is murder and is *definitely* illegal.
All current, known corpse-sicles were clinically dead when frozen.
Revival would thus include:
1) Defrosting
2) Curing what killed you
3) Curing the damage done by the freezing -- probably orders
of magnititude more damage than 2. It is going to be a *long*
time before this can be done. Virtually every cell in the
frozen persons body is ruptured or otherwise badly damaged.
4) Resusitation.
Because of 3, I doubt if anyone frozen -- before or after death
-- using current freezing technology will ever be successfully revived.
Topher
|
350.7 | It's been done with a dog. | HUDSON::SSMITH | | Wed Apr 22 1987 14:09 | 9 |
| Wish I could remember all the details, but there was recently, like
within the last couple of weeks, a dog that was completely frozen
and then revived totaly intact. It was the first such success if
memory serves. Previous animals were damaged in one manner or another
upon defrosting. This dog was just as active and alert as before
freezing.
Steve
|
350.8 | Wow! | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed Apr 22 1987 15:00 | 7 |
| I'm looking forward to seeing the details. I suspect rather strongly
that they did some special things when freezing the dog -- things
not done for the current corpse-sicles. I did not mean to imply
that it would not someday (even soon) be practical to do reversable
freezing, only that we do not *yet* have that technology.
Topher
|
350.9 | I hope it's true. | CASPRO::DLONG | Don't try to out-weird *me*! | Wed Apr 22 1987 15:37 | 9 |
| I'm a tad skeptical of the dog-sicle. I saw the report and they
had the guy who did it on the Today show last week.
They froze the dog for 15 minutes.
Humans have survived 20+ minutes under water and have been revived.
However, in all due fairness, the dog is in no need of extensive
rehabilitation like drowning victims are.
|
350.10 | | ERASER::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Wed Apr 22 1987 15:50 | 8 |
| re "dogsicle":
I saw the dog, yesterday, on the Donahue show (I was home). It
seemed all right, though it seemed to sleep a lot.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
P.S.: Looked like a beagle.
|
350.11 | Details, I want details. | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Wed Apr 22 1987 17:08 | 4 |
| Did they dose the dog with some kind of nontoxic antifreeze, to
keep it from busting its cells while chilled, or what?
Earl Wajenberg
|
350.12 | Not a hot-dog, but ... | ERASER::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Wed Apr 22 1987 17:24 | 10 |
| Re .11:
Well, as I recall, they emptied the dog of blood, putting in some chilled
sort of substitute Oxygen-exchanging liquid medium. Then (I picked
this up with half an ear; I'd other things doing) if I recall right,
they crash-froze the animal, after which they revived him (he is
a male beagle or beagloid).
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
350.13 | Moral issues aside... | USSCSL::IZZO | Ann Izzo...DTN: 255-5377 | Thu Apr 23 1987 17:05 | 24 |
| Re .10
Yes, it was (is) a beagle that was "chilled". I think his name
was Milton. He appeared healthy.
I was on vacation Tuesday and was able to catch most of the Donahue
show as well. I found it facinating, but I'm sceptical of its success.
Milton (or whatever his name is) was not really frozen. He was
"chilled" down to something like 32 degrees cent. and the people
who are being frozen are being brought down to something like absolute
zero. (Sorry I cannot provide more accurate details)
Anyway, my understanding was that the dog, unlike the people who
are being frozen, was also not dead to begin with (although he did
suffer cardiac arrest while being revived).
Currently, as mentioned in an earlier note, people who are being
frozen must be dead. To freeze them prior to death constitutes
murder. Average cost to the "consumer" who'd like to be frozen
for the future is 180K. I think the primary hope at the moment
is to be able to freeze organs more so than bodies. These donated
organs can be "thawed" for transplants, etc.
Ann
|
350.14 | Cure for Insomnia | SNO78C::GREWAL | Harri Grewal - Sydney (Australia) | Mon Apr 27 1987 02:31 | 4 |
| Re: .10
Can this "Chilling Technique" be extended to cure acute sleeplessness?
|
350.15 | Easier "cure" | INK::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Mon Apr 27 1987 08:50 | 6 |
| Re .14:
About as well as a general anesthetic can.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
350.16 | still alot of ifs | AMULET::STOLOS | | Sat Jun 06 1987 19:59 | 21 |
| i think i can answer a few question concerning freezing and some problem
tech problem that i think have not been addressed.
1. there was a problem of water in the cells expanding when frozen
and rupturing the cells. i think this was solved by pressurizing
the body at a certain point of the process for some reason the water
did not behave the same under extreme pressure.
2. one of the biggest problem i think was damage to the body right
after death, you have to be quick with the freezing process.
also one important tech problem that needed to be addressed was
backround radiation. if you got frozen for say a 1000 years
that's a 1000 years of backround radiation slowly tearing you up
on the molecular level...talk about freezer burn ;')
mind you this info is at least 10 years old there could be alot
more research gone on since. also there has been some recent
discussion of a technique called nanotechnology where in a few
years we will have the ability to design machines that are as large
as cells the idea being you could have these machines in your
body repairing you on the inside, such machines could do the same
repair work on a frozen body thus taking care of the burn problem.
still leaves the problem of reviving the body after the repair
work was done.
|
350.17 | crystal growth prevention | DNEAST::LANDRY_FORRE | | Wed Jul 28 1993 17:22 | 5 |
| I've heard of a process wherin dimethyl-sulfoxide was used as an agent
to prevent the crystalization of water. The substance vectors in
through the skin and perminates the entire body, making freezing
possible.
|